Oct 1st is when you are supposed to sign up for the 'Affordable Care Act' or Obamacare. If you don't know what the monthly premiums will cost you, click on the link below and enter your information into the Obamacare calculator. Also don't forget, if you do not sign up, you will be hit with a mandatory fine.

I don't have to sign up for anything. I get insurance from my employer, exactly as before. Although now I don't have copays for office visits or preventative care. So I got no problem with the ACA as it stands. :shrug:

It doesn't apply to me either, because I'm eligible for Medicare. Out of curiosity, I plugged in my info, and I came up with much lower premiums than I paid when I had an individual policy years ago. :bolian:

This doesn't apply to me, either, because I'm covered by my husband's employer. But I sure wish we had the Affordable Care Act when I was single, because I had to rely on family to help me out. If I was single NOW, I wouldn't be able to get or afford coverage because of my preexisting health problems. With this plan, I could probably swing it, if I had to.

This doesn't apply to me, either, because I'm covered by my husband's employer. But I sure wish we had the Affordable Care Act when I was single, because I had to rely on family to help me out. If I was single NOW, I wouldn't be able to get or afford coverage because of my preexisting health problems. With this plan, I could probably swing it, if I had to.

Doesn't bother me at all because I would get the insurance, because I needed it, just like I have car insurance, because I need it. If I was single now, and there was no Affordable Health Act, I'd be majorly screwed. But now, if I had to buy insurance for myself, I could, because otherwise I don't think insurance companies would take me, or they would charge me an outrageous price I could never hope to afford.

I'm searching for new plans in my state and I can't afford it on my own. I was able to before this and now my plan is being phased out. The cost for the bronze plan is almost 100 bucks more than my plan and I really don't know what to do. I've got less than a month to figure things out... :(

Doesn't bother me at all because I would get the insurance, because I needed it, just like I have car insurance, because I need it. If I was single now, and there was no Affordable Health Act, I'd be majorly screwed. But now, if I had to buy insurance for myself, I could, because otherwise I don't think insurance companies would take me, or they would charge me an outrageous price I could never hope to afford.

It's wrong for the government to intrude into our lives and impose fines on people who can't afford mandatory premiums. This will cause a lot of heart ache on families and small business owners across the nation.

I'm with you, auntiehill. I couldn't have bought regular health insurance at all the last few years. I was in Maryland's plan for people who were otherwise uninsurable, one of the predecessors of Obamacare, and it was a real godsend.

An awful lot of people don't seem to understand the whole concept of insurance -- that everyone pays into the pool even when they don't need it, so it's there for when they do -- so young and healthy people are often reluctant to buy health insurance. I'd like to think that education would suffice to convince everyone to buy it. But it obviously doesn't, so I'm okay with having a fine.

I have no problem with it, either. The cost is based on income, so it will be affordable; and the fines are there so that those people who can afford insurance and don't buy it-- knowing that they can sponge off the government if anything happens to them-- now must get it.

Peach, is it $100 more than you pay know even after taking into account the subsidy?

I have no problem with it, either. The cost is based on income, so it will be affordable; and the fines are there so that those people who can afford insurance and don't buy it-- knowing that they can sponge off the government if anything happens to them-- now must get it.

Peach, is it $100 more than you pay know even after taking into account the subsidy?

Many people are finding out their premiums will triple under Obamacare. Take this man for instance. His health insurace premiums are currently $333.00 per month and Obamacare is going to cause the premium to increase to $965.00 a month. That is outrageous. Don't you agree? Please read: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013...are-nightmare/

Andy and Amy Mangione of Louisville, Ky. and their two boys are just the kind of people who should be helped by ObamaCare. But they recently got a nasty surprise in the mail.

It had stunning news. Insurance for the Mangiones and their two boys, which they bought on the individual market, was going to almost triple in 2014 --- from $333 a month to $965.

The insurance carrier made it clear the increase was in order to be compliant with the new health care law.

"This isn't a Cadillac plan, this isn't even a silver plan," Mangione said, referring to higher levels of coverage under ObamaCare.

"This is a high deductible plan where I'm assuming a lot of risk for my health insurance for my family. And nothing has changed, our boys are healthy-- they're young --my wife is healthy. I'm healthy, nothing in our medical history has changed to warrant a tripling of our premiums.

"Well I'm the one that does the budget,” said his wife. "Eventually I've got that coming down the pike that I gotta figure out what we're gonna cut what we're gonna do, to afford a $1,000 a month premium."

Their insurance company, Humana, declined to comment, but the notice to the Mangiones carried this paragraph:

If medicaid is expanded in my state, I qualify for that. If not, the silver plan is nearly 80% of my income, and the bronze plan is 60%.

So, essentially, I'd have to give up the majority of my income for health insurance I wouldn't be able to use because the hand full of pennies I'm left with isn't enough for the copays?

Is that website some conservative-made thing designed to piss me off, or is this real? if it's real, this is profoundly stupid.

Although, if I get into the graduate school program I want, which is slowly shifting from "unlikely" to "definitely possible," full health coverage is part of the deal, so I'll be fine in two years or so. If I get into a grad school program that is other than my first choice, they may have health insurance available that I can afford. We'll see.

My current school (a community college) has a health plan for students that costs about $1000 per year, but that's out of my ability to afford right now. Next year I'll be at Wayne State, and able to take out more in student loans, so hopefully they'll have something adequate.

Health insurance is stupid. My employers in the past provided shitty plans and didn't pay me very much so I couldn't use them ever because of the copays. Going to a doctor cost at minimum $50. About the only thing it was good for is not bankrupting myself if an emergency came up... maybe, as there was a yearly limit of $3000 or less. So, I wouldn't bankrupt myself if as long as I only had one emergency per year. Luckily I didn't have any.

My mom has some government program for those that don't qualify for medicaid, and it has copays I could afford, but they won't give it to me because I'm a college student.

The insurance carrier made it clear the increase was in order to be compliant with the new health care law.

And we all know that insurance people never lie.

Beside, as an Italian citizen, I get my healthcare from the our National Health Service. It's tax-funded and it's ranked as the second best in the world by the World Health Organization. So, yay for "socialism", I guess.